New suppliers race to plug in to electric car market
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[January 23, 2023] By
Nick Carey and Paul Lienert
WOKING, England (Reuters) - The global auto industry has committed $1.2
trillion to developing electric vehicles (EVs), providing a golden
opportunity for new suppliers to grab contracts providing everything
from battery packs to motors and inverters.
Startups specialising in batteries and coatings to protect EV parts, and
suppliers traditionally focused on niche motorsports or Formula One (F1)
racing, have been chasing EV contracts. Carmakers design platforms to
last a decade, so high-volume models can generate large revenues for
years.
The next generation of EVs is due to hit around 2025 and many carmakers
have sought help plugging gaps in their expertise, providing a window of
opportunity for new suppliers.
"We've gone back to the days of Henry Ford where everyone is asking 'how
do you make these things work properly?'," says Nick Fry, CEO of F1
engineering and technology firm McLaren Applied.
"That's a huge opportunity for companies like us."
Bought from McLaren by private equity firm Greybull Capital in 2021,
McLaren Applied has adapted an efficient inverter developed for F1
racing for EVs. An inverter helps control the flow of electricity to and
from the battery pack.
The silicon carbide IPG5 inverter weighs just 5.5 kg (12 lb) and can
extend an EV's range by over 7%. Fry says McLaren Applied is working
with around 20 carmakers and suppliers, and the inverter will appear in
high-volume luxury EV models starting January 2025.
Mass-market carmakers often prefer to develop EV components in-house and
own the technology themselves. After years of pandemic-related parts
shortages, they are wary of over-reliance on suppliers.
"We just can't afford to be reliant on third parties making those
investments for us," said Tim Slatter, head of Ford in Britain.
Traditional suppliers, such as German heavyweights Bosch and
Continental, are also investing heavily in EVs and other technologies to
stay ahead in a fast-changing industry.
But smaller companies say there are still opportunities, particularly
with low-volume manufacturers that cannot afford huge EV investments, or
luxury and high-performance carmakers seeking an edge.
Croatia's Rimac, an electric hypercar maker part-owned by Germany's
Porsche AG that also supplies battery systems and powertrain components
to other automakers, says an undisclosed German carmaker will use a
Rimac battery system in a high-performance model - with annual
production of around 40,000 units - starting this year, with more signed
up.
"We need to be 20%, 30% better than what they can do and then they work
with us," CEO Mate Rimac says. "If they can make a 100-kilowatt hour
battery pack, we must make a 130-kilowatt pack in the same dimensions
for the same cost."
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Nick Fry, chief executive of McLaren
Applied, holds the IPG5 inverter the Formula One engineering and
technology firm has developed for luxury carmakers and which will
start appearing in premium electric vehicles in January 2025 in
Woking, Britain, November 23, 2022. REUTERS/Nick Carey
NO TIME TO LOSE
Some suppliers like Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Actnano have had
long relationships with EV pioneer Tesla. Actnano has developed a
coating that protects EV parts from condensation and its business
has spread to advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS), as well as
other carmakers including Volvo, Ford, BMW and Porsche.
California-based startup CelLink has developed an entirely
automated, flat and easy-to-install "flex harness", instead of a
wire harness to group and guide cables in a vehicle. CEO Kevin
Coakley would not identify customers but said CelLink's harnesses
had been installed in around a million EVs. Only Tesla has that
scale.
Coakley said CelLink was working with U.S. and European carmakers,
and with a European battery maker on battery wiring.
Others are focused on low-volume manufacturers, like UK startup
Ionetic, which develops battery packs that would be too expensive
for smaller companies to make themselves.
"Currently it costs just too much to electrify, which is why you see
some manufacturers delaying their electrification launch," CEO James
Eaton said.
Since 1971, Swindon Powertrain has developed powerful motorsports
engines. But it has now also developed battery packs, electric
powertrains, e-axles and is working with around 20 customers,
including carmakers and an electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL)
aircraft maker.
"I realized if we don't embrace this, we're going to end up working
for museums," said managing director Raphael Caille.
But time may be running out.
Mate Rimac says major carmakers scrambled in the last three years to
roll out EVs and now have strategies largely in place.
"For those who haven't signed projects, I'm not sure how long the
window of opportunity will remain open," he said.
($1 = 0.8226 pounds)
(Reporting by Nick Carey; Editing by Mark Potter)
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